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This post was written by: Katie Kirchner & Rebecca Feinberg.
Until now, website owners were in control of how their page titles were displayed in search results. In August, Google announced that it is testing updates to how title tags are generated on the engine’s results page. This update focuses on displaying more readable, accurate, and accessible titles for pages in search.
Keep reading for what we’re seeing in search results, why Google has started making these changes, what to monitor about your organic performance in the wake of this update, and how to adjust your SEO strategy accordingly moving forward.
In This Article:
According to a study by Amsive Digital, the most common ways we’re seeing Google change the titles of web pages in search results are:
What’s Coded in HTML:
What Appears in Search Results:
What’s Now Happening:
Google is pulling the title from Header Tags (in this case — the H2 tag).
Google is swapping pipes (|) for dashes (-) and updating branding.
The driving force for Google is short and sweet, simply put:
HTML title tags don’t always describe a page well,
— Google Search Central.
Google is using this new system of generating titles for web pages in order to create easier to read titles in search results that accurately represent what the page is about.
Google making moves to improve the user experience in search results is nothing new. In 2020, Google began to rewrite meta descriptions to better match them to the search query and accurately summarize what is on the web page.
Google rewriting title tags does NOT devalue the importance of title tags to your SEO strategy but instead sheds light on the title tags that are underperforming in the engine’s eyes.
Title tags still matter for SEO. Google’s update is designed to improve page titles to be more readable, accurate, and accessible for searchers. If your title tags meet these criteria they will be displayed in search results.
Google is NOT automatically changing every title in web results.
Not only are title tags likely to appear in search engine results pages (SERPs), but they are additionally:
If your title tag was ignored by Google and other content from the site was pulled in, this is a good indicator that your title tag could use improvement.
💡 Follow these guidelines to create an optimized title tag to better control how you’re being displayed in search.
To pull coded title tags at scale, you can use tools like Screaming Frog (the free version will allow you to crawl up to 500 URLs).
If one of your web titles has been impacted that does NOT mean all your web pages have been impacted.
As Google generates title tags it may influence click-through-rate. Since CTR is an indication of how a user interacts with a listing in search results, it may directly impact keyword rankings.
💡 You can easily monitor both click-through-rate and your organic position in Google Search Console.
To check for impact, you can look at what is appearing in search results vs what has been coded on your site using the following tools to pull titles:
💡 This can be a pretty manual process, I recommend automating as much of it as possible.
To illustrate further, I’ll walk through how I approached this for Seer’s website below. Please note that this is only one approach and that there may be others out there.
You can use IFERROR and VLOOKUP formulas to ID title tags generated by Google vs those appearing in search results the way they were coded.
Step 1: Copy the Screaming Frog import into Sheet 1 (renamed to “SF Data”)
Step 2: Copy the scraped results into Sheet 2 (renamed to “Scraped Results”)
Step 3: Go to “SF Data” and apply your IFERROR + VLOOKUP formula
💡 Now, you have a list of the Pages (with URLs) that have their title tags being replaced in Google Search Results and your investigation and corrections can begin.
Continue to monitor your site’s performance — paying special attention to changes in CTR, and following the steps above to identify any pages that have been impacted by this update so that those title tags can be optimized.
As marketers learn more and search results continue to change, make sure you’re following Seer Interactive’s newsletter so that you don’t miss out on any updates:
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